Prince Charles is staying true to the Queen's mantra to "never complain, never explain" when it comes to The Crown. The Prince of Wales is choosing to ignore the Netflix series' impact on his image, as well as the public perception about his wife, Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall.

The royal pair has recently been the subject of online attacks from trolls who have seen The Crown season 4 and, for the first time, learned how their relationship started. Prince Charles and Camilla's social media team had to shut down the comments section of their Instagram and Twitter because of the deluge of verbal attacks from fans who think that The Crown is a factual account of the lives of the royal family.

However, royal biographer Howard Hodgson, who wrote the book Charles: The Man Who Will Be King, believes that the Prince of Wales will continue to ignore The Crown. Hodgson said that Queen Elizabeth's heir would not make an effort to stop the show from streaming on Netflix just because it featured him and Camilla in an unflattering light.

The author also said that those who truly know the "life and times of Prince Charles" are also aware that the narrative about his marriage to his first wife, Princess Diana, was "largely distorted." Hodgson believes that the heir to the throne will weather this bump because it's simply a rehash of what he went through before.

The controversy over The Crown hasn't died down yet weeks since Netflix released the fourth season on Nov. 15. Even U.K.'s Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden asked the streaming platform to put a disclaimer on every episode because some viewers, especially those who have no idea about the British royal family's actual history, think the basis of the stories is true.

Dowden said that he's concerned the show is taken as a history lesson "by a generation of viewers" that were not alive when Prince Charles and Princess Diana married, had two sons, and separated. These are the main storylines in the fourth season.

The Crown actress Helena Bonham Carter agreed that Netflix has a "moral responsibility" to its viewers. In the official podcast for the show, the actress said that supports the call for the streamer to put a disclaimer that the stories are a complete "dramatization."

Meanwhile, actor Josh O'Connor, who played Prince Charles, told Entertainment Weekly that the royal is not a villain, despite what some viewers might think. To him, the future King was once a boy lost about what he really wants. But the actor also believes that his marriage to the Princess of Wales was a real tragedy.